AgriLife Research now monitoring sulfur dioxide in Amarillo

AMARILLO – Under contract with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, Texas A&M AgriLife Research has begun monitoring sulfur dioxide concentrations in Amarillo, according to the AgriLife Research engineer in charge of the project.

The Amarillo site is part of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s national monitoring network for sulfur dioxide, said Dr. Brent Auvermann, AgriLife Research agricultural engineer/environmental systems specialist in Amarillo.

As one of EPA’s six “criteria pollutants” under the federal Clean Air Act, sulfur dioxide is the subject of a primary air quality standard designed to protect public health, Auvermann said.

Putting a site in Amarillo wasn’t due to expected high concentrations of sulfur dioxide, but rather the absence of monitoring locations in this part of Texas, he said. EPA set the site-locating criteria and specifications; TCEQ selected and built the site per those specifications; and AgriLife Research has been contracted to operate and maintain the site.

Auvermann has supervised monitoring of Amarillo’s fine-particle concentrations for the Texas commission and EPA for almost 10 years to ensure Amarillo and the region’s air quality meet federal standards.

A monitoring site for sulfur dioxide concentrations has been set up in Amarillo. (Texas A&M AgriLife Research photo by Kay Ledbetter)

He also oversees the National Atmospheric Deposition Program and Clean Air Status and Trends Network monitoring site at Canonceta south of Amarillo, where instruments estimate the wet and dry deposition of various forms of nitrogen and sulfur.

Sulfur dioxide gas is a hazardous gas produced when fossil fuels – coal, diesel, natural gas – that contain sulfur are burned, he said. At high levels, it is considered a threat to the respiratory health of humans and animals.

The Amarillo monitoring site includes instrumentation to measure sulfur dioxide concentrations, as well as a weather station to collect data that willhelp interpret where any elevated concentrations might come from, Auvermann said.

“Here in the High Plains we don’t expect to see sulfur dioxide levels anywhere near EPA’s national standard, but a long-term monitoring site will help us be sure,” he said. “The national standard is 75 parts per billion. Right now we are measuring less than 2 parts per billion at the Amarillo site, and that is the kind of number I anticipate seeing here.”

According to EPA standards, if the sulfur dioxide standard was exceeded more than 1 percent of the time, which is about four days each year, EPA could designate Amarillo as a “nonattainment area” for sulfur dioxide, Auvermann said. As of July, there were no sulfur dioxide nonattainment areas in Texas.

“And I simply do not expect us to be one, at least not during my career,” he said. “But background monitoring allows us to see trends as they develop.”

Auvermann said the Texas High Plains’ wide open spaces, constant wind and sunny skies make its atmosphere relatively turbulent, “and we really don’t have that much heavy industry or coal burning, so we don’t anticipate seeing high concentrations of sulfur dioxide here in Amarillo.”

Another reason Amarillo’s measurements will probably stay low, he said, is that the power plants in this region burn relatively low-sulfur coal out of Wyoming’s Powder River Basin.